C. Ravel et al., THE EFFECT OF IMPERFECT TRANSMISSION ON THE FREQUENCY OF MUTUALISTIC SEED-BORNE ENDOPHYTES IN NATURAL-POPULATIONS OF GRASSES, Oikos, 80(1), 1997, pp. 18-24
We develop a simple mathematical model to explain the lower than expec
ted levels of infection of wild perennial ryegrass populations in Fran
ce by endophytic Neotyphodium fungi (formerly named Acremonium). Indee
d, seed-borne Neotyphodium endophytes are considered as mutualistic sy
mbionts, because they increase survival, growth and flowering rates of
their hosts, and should therefore be present at very high frequencies
in all host populations. However, recent surveys have shown that 70%
of wild populations of perennial ryegrass harbour such endophytes in F
rance. Moreover, most infected populations exhibit a low level of infe
ction. Our simple model, taking into account the life-cycIes of the ho
st and the fungus, shows that these patterns can be satisfactorily exp
lained if the vertical transmission of the fungus is imperfect. Such i
mperfect transmission, thou,gh never measured in natural populations,
is likely because of the reported mortality of the endophyte in stored
seeds. This process, analogous to the mutation-selection balance of c
lassical population genetics theory, may explain the observed patterns
even better when we consider random fluctuations of selection coeffic
ients over time and genetic drift.